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Various

"Notes and Queries, Number 08, December 22, 1849"

" He gives no _derivation_ of the word
_itself_, and yet pronounces the very common way of spelling it
improper.
What reference to, or connexion with, _mushrooms_ has the word?--and why
_Catsup_, with the inference that it is synonymous with _Catchup_?
G.
"_Let me make a Nation's Ballads, who will may make their Laws!_"
One perpetually hears this exclamation attributed to different people.
In a magazine which I took up this morning, I find it set down to "a
certain orator of the last century;" a friend who is now with me, tells
me that it was unquestionably the saying of the celebrated Lord Wharton;
and I once heard poor Edward Irving, in a sermon, quote it as the
exclamation of Wallace, or some other Scottish patriot. Do relieve my
uncertainty, and, for the benefit of our rising orator, tell us to whom
the saying ought to be set down.
C.U.B.E.R.
_To endeavour Oneself._
In the Collect for the 2nd Sunday after Easter, in the preface to the
Confirmation Service, and in the form of Ordering of priest, the verb
"endeavour" takes (clearly, I think) a middle-voice form, "to endeavour
one's self." Is there any other authority for this usage? No dictionary
I have seen recognises it.
G.P.
_Date of the Anonymous Ravennas._
Can you inform me of the date of the _Chorographia Britanniae Anonymi
Ravennatis?_
W.C.
[This is a very difficult question.


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